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Oblomovka

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2003-08-04

me vs. them

I've just spent about two weeks researching various Wi-Fi contention and multi-hop routing issues for an article. And within minutes of finishing it, Slashdot runs two stories that would have saved me most of that time. And which, anyway, now transform my ingenious point into common knowledge for most /. readers.

I hate the Net. Hates it, hates it.

2003-08-02

annie and russell

Flew up to Portland and back down, which involved getting up at 5AM and stumbling home for 5PM. Was absolutely worth it though, as I slid into being a guest at my grandparents-in-law's wedding. Annie and Russell are a fine couple and were dressed to the nines. They're both over eighty, and have been living together for thirty years. It was beautiful, so beautiful in fact that every picture Quinn and I took ended up looking like the arresting front-cover image from a major corporate rebranding exercise.


(from Quinn's moblog)

Can't you see that on a double-page spread, with "For All The Colours Of Your Life: Reckitt Industrial " underneath?

I have an even better one of Annie talking on a mobile phone while Rusell looks on, from behind a big wedding cake. I await the call from Verizon's marketing team.

2003-08-01

libegg

Spent the day not-writing in the brand spanking new MLK Public Library in San Jose. It's a co-operative venture between San Jose University and the city itself. Puzzling over how to get to the uni and the town's residents to integrate better, they decided to smersh their two (slightly poor) library collections together into one $178 million co-venture.

It's worked amazingly well. Everything was running smoothly on the first day. They've combined the two catalogues (even though one used Dewey and the other the Library of Congress cataloguing system), and moved both groups of readers into a brand new building.

There are 150 data-ports in the building for laptops, about three hundred PCs for general use, and hundred laptops that can be loaned. See how long they last. (No wifi yet, though.) Looks like they've negotiated deals with all the SJSU academic database providers - so I can get LexisNexis ,the O'Reilly Safari. book collection, the OED and a stack of other for-money subscriptions if I access them from within the building.

The printed book collection really benefits from the merge. The usual popular introductions to non-fiction fields are all there, courtesy of the public library, and backed up with several large research collections if you're tempted to pursue any in more detail. I love deep, wide archives like this.

The selection gets more and more ethereal as you clamber up the seven floors. There's a browsing section on the ground floor, laid out like a bookstore, and at the very top, there are piles of SJSU theses, empty group study rooms and that hay-and-dust smell of old, hardbound stacks.

But my favourite moment was when Quinn and I were snooping around the pop fiction section. Someone leant on the "Mystery" bookshelf. It swung around, to show a false shelf of books behind with a fake secret passage.

A library with easter eggs!

2003-07-31

you commendo

It's been ten years since CD-ROM drives became affordable (prices dropped from $700 to $200 in 1993), and I've been asked to write a piece about the rise (and fall) (and rise) of the CD-ROM as a medium. As part of this, I'm doing a little retrospective of the best CD-ROMs of the decade.

It feels a bit odd to hive-off CD-ROM as a category. There's something very 1996 about doing that. It does mean something, though: a package that depends on permanent storage rather than pulling data off the Net; whose form is melded around slow-access times, and perhaps nodding to that "digital book" ideal.

I'm guess I'm looking for apps that exploited the CD-ROM form well, and perhaps lived up to that all-to-brief moment of being the forefront of "interactive multimedia", but have still managed to survive the test of time.

Me, I have a soft-spot for Voyager's Spinal Tap, which not only set the standard for video CD-ROM, but I think defined how DVD bonus material would be executed. And I think I'll include the original Myst (even though I'm a bit loathe to include every game too big to fit on floppies), because its rendered gameplay was such a ingenious exploitation of the large size of CD-ROMs, rather than clever programming. And then there's the You Don't Know Jack, spin-offs of which I still see for sale.

What are your favourites? All suggestions ungratefully purloined.

Discuss!

2003-07-30

the london underground in cartesian triplets

Nigel Rantor is collecting datapoints to build an open 3D map of the London Underground, and is looking for suggestions as to what to do with it. Geowankers, assemble!

2003-07-29

blog activity

Oh, shut up, yes, it's another blog entry about blogs. I'm interested, all right?

Maciej's team have done the first number-crunching I could think of with his Blog Census stats. How many blogs are actively updated? Roughly two-thirds, it seems -65%. The rest are either abandoned (where the blogger says he's quitting - 4%), no longer updated (no posts in two months - 16%), sites that just contain test posts (8%), 404ing, or otherwise inaccessible.

2003-07-28

The European Enforcement Directive

RIAA-style revealing of subscriber identities without even sub poenas? And worse? What fresh hell is this?


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

petit disclaimer:
My employer has enough opinions of its own, without having to have mine too.